The Great Shopping Mall Rebirth Has Begun

Malls were drastically overbuilt even before Covid-19 surfaced, but the pandemic forced a long-overdue shakeout into effect

Rob Walker
Marker
Published in
3 min readJan 8, 2021

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Photo: Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images

Epic Games, best known as the developer of megahit game Fortnite, recently revealed that its new global headquarters will be… a mall. Specifically, the company is buying a 980,000-square-foot mall in its hometown of Cary, North Carolina, with plans to convert it into “offices and recreation space,” the Wall Street Journal reported this week.

That sounds like a fable invented to illustrate the economic shift from the physical to the digital. Or maybe it just sounds like a joke at the expense of mall cops and Orange Julius employees across the United States. But actually, it’s welcome news — and hopefully, it’s a sign of things to come.

Malls were drastically overbuilt even before Covid-19 surfaced, but the pandemic dealt a body blow to the sector. The wave of retail closures forced some mall landlords to declare bankruptcy and underscored the declining prospects of weaker, aging shopping centers with less-convenient locations, second-tier tenants, and few amenities. By some estimates, a whopping 25% of all malls operating today could fail. So the time has come for a boom in former malls.

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